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'''HIP 67522''' is a G-class star which is slightly larger (1.38 R Sun) and cooler (5675ºK vs. 5772ºK for Sun). It lies about 127 ] away from the Solar System and in Earth's sky it is at Right Ascension 13h50m06s, Declination -40º51'09". Its visual magnitude of 9.8 makes it much too faint to be seen by the unaided eye. | '''HIP 67522''' is a G-class star which, by comparison with the ], is slightly larger (1.38 R Sun) and cooler (5675ºK vs. 5772ºK for Sun). It lies about 127 ] away from the Solar System and in Earth's sky it is at Right Ascension 13h50m06s, Declination -40º51'09". Its visual magnitude of 9.8 makes it much too faint to be seen by the unaided eye. | ||
Two exoplanets, ] and ], are known to orbit the star and transit its face as seen from Earth. Their orbital periods are much less than Mercury's 88 days around the Sun, being 6.96 days for ''b'' and 14.33 days for ''c''.<ref>https://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/overview/HIP%2067522 NASA Exoplanet Archive</ref> | Two exoplanets, ] and ], are known to orbit the star and transit its face as seen from Earth. Their orbital periods are much less than Mercury's 88 days around the Sun, being 6.96 days for ''b'' and 14.33 days for ''c''.<ref>https://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/overview/HIP%2067522 NASA Exoplanet Archive</ref> | ||
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Revision as of 09:04, 21 December 2024
HIP 67522 is a G-class star which, by comparison with the Sun, is slightly larger (1.38 R Sun) and cooler (5675ºK vs. 5772ºK for Sun). It lies about 127 parsecs away from the Solar System and in Earth's sky it is at Right Ascension 13h50m06s, Declination -40º51'09". Its visual magnitude of 9.8 makes it much too faint to be seen by the unaided eye.
Two exoplanets, HIP 67522 b and HIP 67522 c, are known to orbit the star and transit its face as seen from Earth. Their orbital periods are much less than Mercury's 88 days around the Sun, being 6.96 days for b and 14.33 days for c.
References
- https://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/overview/HIP%2067522 NASA Exoplanet Archive